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'The Place Where Contrarieties are Equally True’: Blake and the Science-Fiction Counterculture

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 17:20 authored by Jason WhittakerJason Whittaker
<p>This article explores the more detached and ironic view of Blake that emerged in the 1970s compared to appropriations of him in the 1960s, as evident in three science-fiction novels: Ray Nelson’s Blake’s Progress (1977), Angela Carter’s The Passion of New Eve (1977), and J. G. Ballard’s The Unlimited Dream Company (1979). In adopting a more antagonistic posture towards Blake, all three of these books reflect increasingly ambivalent attitudes towards the countercultures of the 1960s, and can be read as critical of some of those very energies that the Romantic movement was seen to embody. Thus Nelson rewrites the relationship of William and Catherine, in which the engraver comes under the influence of a diabolic Urizen, while Carter recasts the Prophet Los as a Charles Manson-esque figure. Even Ballard, the most benign of the three, views Blakean energy as a release of potentially dangerous psychopathologies. In all the novels, we see a contrarian use of misprision, rewriting Blake as Blake had rewritten Milton</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities Executive Office (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Bulletin of the John Rylands Library

Volume

98

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

93-106

Publisher

Manchester University Press

ISSN

2054-9318

Date Submitted

2022-03-22

Date Accepted

2021-11-18

Date of First Publication

2022-05-31

Date of Final Publication

2022-05-31

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-03-22

ePrints ID

48406

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